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4^kwi>t^3 and warmer thursday friday prob nÃŸr < ably fair moder3ie to brisk southerly winds thursday probably becoming jhy \ westerly friday the temperature yesterday s^a average - 68 /_\ *__. highest 77 j ck lowest 58 vol ix no 133 a m â€¢ * Chicago examiner thursday Chicago may 25 1911 18 pages thursday wj'lt if tt if it ct Â«__ miw dhtrtrt - 0n and "**" june lbt r ui s l/ul1 "' 1 you can leave your want ads at the examiner's new business office no 9 west madison street just west of state street remember after june lst n4 9 west madison street phone main 5000 begf-rtered in petcf omf rfmt vamarai ty cirrur o a pÂ»tent ofiim rrmÂ«-,r uine k_j_is j ao Â„â€ž,â€ž ,Â£, h â€ž__, john r walsh pardon refused by president Taft c w morse clemency plea also is denied necessary to make examples of men in high places who commit crime says Taft restitution cannot undue moral wrong nor can previous character condone 64wn the mad rush for wealth in the last few decades m the lines between profit from legitimate busi ness and improper gain from undue use of trust control over other people's property and money have sometimes been dimmed and the interest of society requires that whenever opportunity offers those charged with the en forcement of the law should emphasize the distinction between honest business and dishonest breaches of trust president Taft washington may 24 â€” president Taft to-day refused to pardon john r walsh of Chicago and charles w morse of new york both convicted of violating the hanking laws and serving sen tences in federal penitentiaries walsh is confined in the penitentiary at leavenworth kas on janu ary 19 1910 he began serving a five-year sentence and under the provisions of the new parole law he will be eligible for freedom in the middle of sep tember of this year the decisions were handed down by the president at 7:30 o'clock to night and followed a lengthy conference with attorney general wicker sham in both cases he followed the recommendations of the attorney general president taft's action in the walsh case was based strictly on a close analysis of the facts contained in the records declaring that a man who uses the funds of a bank to promote his private interests in such a manner that he is guilty of a fraudulent breach of trust must be punished under the national banking act the president swept aside the reasons advanced by walsh and the thousands who petitioned for hiÃŸ pardon in denying the application charles w am morse who is serving a fifteen â– years the ga â– where he was on january the i characterizes pre 1 accordingly he gives new â– banker the privilege renewing lt i after january decision in walsh the president's decision walsh i in as h john was mls i the fnnds the Chicago i while its was â– sentenced to the leaven h for fire be b jr his sentence january 18 1910 1 is because his h in h seenred him no i hem his banks throushm the his fortune third h he in nt h to substan-m to the fourth because h he ls an in health likely h to one who borne ah good reputation life . itii â– plicity the facts are a la.-_.ph in tbree banks the Chicago na-h the equitable company h the home savings the ter h two Illinois state corporations nhso-h lutely controlled them m h a substantial in ofh them by hh^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^h ruined by methods h he used them to the forh the iime-b etone enter-h using his banks â– be took tbeir ' n h the character mentioned â– cither purchase bonds h which had to h,v ÃŸ lending from funds the money i on notes secured by such bonds h s be neariy the whole funds h the three banks the security of tbes-h because these tn-*eÂ«t h stents the banks the banks ln order â– to a walshh holdings properties andh paid depositors in theh liquidation the banks sustain a i the application for pardon dr>-h in the shows moral h turpitude insidious anof danirerousm ilnd the hank-h ing laws especially those h laws were to secure on the part h of banking officers the faithful m bnd honest administration their trust h in the use handling the funds of ÃŸ the i ts surplus andh deposits for the the shareholders h a officer who lti l promote iu pri-m vate interest the knowledge â– and consent the shareholders vrhoniÃŸ be ls a involves the whole capital h ef speculation h from to derive sur-h is guilty a breach <> r h is andh must be natioual^h ranking fin excuse such a jto reference business methods h co suggestion enterprises h ho up industriesÃŸ tnd to goodÃŸ billie hitt serves as miss elkins escort seeing her off to coronation with her mother haven't married her he says , i new york may 24 mlss katherine elkins chaperoned by her mother slipped i into town late to-day from washington be fore sailing for the coronation the ladies were traveling in charge of that hand some and popular young society man bil lie hitt who has been almost constantly in attendance upon miss elkins since the death of her father whe the party stepped from the parlor car rosemary miss elkins was laughing and chatting with young hitt who was carrying her blue cape and a dark coat belonging to mrs elkins now please do not bother miss elkins he said i know that you must put your questions so fire away at me i have not married mlss elkins and i cannot discuss the abruzzi affair i am not going to sail witb miss elkins and her mother i came tbis far with them and shall return to washington in a day or so mr hitt inquired if the trunks had all , arrived the agent pointed to five heavily loaded trucks and remarked we won't get half of them for this trip sir there ts an awful lot that you have there was one grip bearing the initials w f h mlss elkins and hitt had a confidential â– chat aboard the ferryboat whispering as 1 the trip was made up the river thaw lawyer convicted daniel j o'reilly found guilty of receiving stolen property new york may 24 it took a little more than an hour this afternoon for a jury to return a verdict of guilty against daniel j o'reilly one of the lawyers in the thaw case who was on trial before justice davis in the supreme court on a charge of receiving stolen property in connection with the return of the 85,000 worth of stocks stolen from aaron ban croft the broker following the convic tion the lawyer was remanded for sen tence to-morrow carnegie off for peek at coronation of king steel master makes gift and talks of trust case and oil de cision before sailing new york may 24 as well as he j ever was physically and financially an 1 drew carnepie sailed to-day on the oceanic i to have a peek at the coronation of king george v mrs carnegie and mlss car negie who accompanied the distinguished steel master were not nearly as active as the multi-millionaire who added another 100,000 to his gift of 750,000 to the bu reau of south american republics just he fore he sailed if i am wanted to testify in any in vestigation the government may make into the affairs of the united states steel cor poration he said i am ready and willing to do so so far i have heard nothing about it the question of arbitration between the united states and great britain is in the hands of the lord but mr Taft and mr knox are his active agents and 1 believe they will arrange matters for the good of all referring to the standard oil case mr carnegie said that it was a splendid de cision and business corporations all over the country will profit by it they wiu have a more assured position than ever he added for the highest court in the land decided in favor of the spirit rather than the letter of the law before sailing mr carnegie announced that he would not extend any aid to the depositors of the carnegie trust company he said he did not see how he could he regarded as being responsible for deposits made with the trust company mrs love gets decree wins divorce in new york while husband sued in west mrs sidney c love wife of the once wealthy Chicago broker was granted a divorce yesterday at wbite plains n y the struggle as to which should receive the decree was a bitter one love having filed a suit in the state of washington where he is now interested in some rich mines the decree to mrs love was granted after proceedings that were characterized by every effort at secrecy justice martin j keough of the supreme court of new york heard the testimony in his chambers after the evidence all was in he ordered it suppressed the actual granting of the decree of divorce has put an end to the numerous stories of a reconciliation mrs love formerly was miss marjorie burnes daughter of a st joseph mo mining man who had accumulated a tremendous for tune river victim may be dixon body found bound with wire be lieved to be identified the supposed victim of murder whose body bound witb wire wos found in the Chicago river may 15 may be identified by means of a letter from g w dixon of hernando miss describing the appearance of his son al j dixon who mysteriously disappeared from the hotel waldorf early in april the elder dixon's description tallies exactly with that of the man whose body is still lying unclaimed in the county morgue dixon left the woldorf the first monday in april he has not been seen since his effects a suitcase and a french horn were sent to the father yesterday by manager n b grasser a key found on the dead man's body it is believed will fit the suitcase chicaco woman weds jap mrs emelie luome married to nip ponese in vancouver vancouver b c may 24 after be ing refused a license in portland john inagaki twenty-eight years old a wealthy japanese merchant of san francisco and mrs emelie luome thirty-one years old of Chicago were married in this city to day by judge g l davey mrs luome who said she lived at 8525 stewart avenue Chicago stated she had been a widow nine years mrs luome said she met her pres ent husband 4n san francisco in a mission school they will live in seattle inagaki having sold out his business noted balloonist is shot von phul probably mortally hurt in quarrel over chorus girl denver col may 24 charles s von phul the st louis balloonist who is here preparatory to making a long flight waa shot three times to-night in a quarrel over a chorus girl in the barroom of the browu hotel by h f honwood of new zone g b copelln a mining man and j w atkinson of denver were wounded by stray bullets von phul probably will die gov wilson to be docked trip west may cost new jersey executive mopth's pay trenton n j may 24 this month's pay check is likely to be lost to governor wuson by reason of his trip to the fai west it is understood that the attorney general has advised that the money b paid to acting governor ackerman prece dent being taken from the docking of former gtovernor voorhees for a european trip there is much adverse comment in asmuch as governor wilson is a compara tively poor man while ackerman is a mnl umillionaira .. u _ . Illinois is broke tax bill forgotten hurburgh neglects to report 19,500,000 measure to legislature deneen laughs at muss gets opportunity to use some thing besides waterways in special session call springfield 111 may 24 when the legislature went home saturday it forgot to pass the tax levy bill the little item of 19,500,000 still reposes in the appro priations committee box but it is dead everything died when the assembly passed the joint resolution to adjourn sine die may 31 and on that day consider only messages from the governor as the matter stands now the state is broke â€” broke for two years to come ex cept for the trifling 8,500,000 that is ex pected from the various fee offices which after july 1 must turn their collections into the state treasury it would be the greatest joke auy legis lative body ever played on itself were it not so tragic for charles e hurburgh of galesburg chairman of the seuate ap propriations committee is one of the stake horses iu the deneen stables being primed for the gubernatorial derby and ou the face of the returns it was poor hard-work ing conscientious honest obliging char ley who forgot to report ont the most im portant bill of the entire 1,200 introduced bill definitely dead no one seems to know just how the thing can be untangled so the state treasury may get enough money to honor the 28 000,000 of appropriations that were passed in the last few minutes of the session along about 7 o'clock saturday morning motions were made in both bouses to recon sider the joint resolution killing all bills ln committee and oa the calendars and adjourning until may 31 a proceeding made necessary by the attorney general's ruling that the governor be given ten days to sign all bills after they come into his hands from the engrossers and the two speakers these motisbs were only made to be voted down and they were duly voted down by this handy means acts of the two houses are hermetically sealed and double rivlted they can't be pried open again so by the records now house bill 673 is dead as a finnan haddie even if the members are called back may 31 instead of permitting oglesby and adkins to ad journ sine die they cannot consider any new bills include tax levy in call one sure way out of the pickle is for gov ernor deneen to include the tax levy in his call for a special session oglesby how ever has decided to notify the senate to return in a body may 31 he believes that by unanimous consent the senate may rescind the combined slaughter and adjournment resolution on behalf of the house adkins and one mem ber could do the same then the bill could be revived and sent to third reading and on june 1 it could be passed but right here another interesting prob lem injects itself by rescinding the slaughter resolution the assembly will take the lid from the whole legislative pot so that new bills may be introduced old bills called up and the marathon riot of may 19 resumed where it left off by the time the senate wise men get together they may decide to let the governor fix things up in bis special session cail which would be a beautiful chance for the gov ernor to hang his special sefsion on an other excuse than waterway deneen laughs at muss when mr deneen heard of the muss he just laughed he wouldn't say a word elmer hill a clerk in the secretary of state's office found the bull he wns checking up on revenue and appropria tion bills and couldn't the tax levy meas ure he sought secretary james paddock of the senate padock looked ln the box allotted to hurburgh's committee there was the bill it ha eome over from the house may 16 and had been referred to the senate committee may 17 chairman shanahan of the house appropriations who sent the bill through the house was bard at work in his room when paddock rushed ln and broke tho news to him shanahan has only a few hairs left on his pate but he did his best to remove tbem with bis fists the bill provided for a levy of 7,750,000 for each of the years 1911 and 1912 for general revenue and 2,000,000 a year for the school fund hangs red light on self man then drops peacefully to sleep in street detroit mich may 24 alexander abrahams takes no chances when he gets a jag he proved it before dawn this morn ing he became sleepy on his way home and decided to lie down but before doing bo he went to a pile of gravel where he stole a red lantern and deposited it by his side to warn autos away then he went to sleep in the street a policeman found him }' __ _ â€¢ c â– -'" \ ~ ' j abandons coronation to see dying husband bessie clayton finds him convales cent and refuses to go to man she is suing new yirk may 24 though her suit for divorce is pending in the courts here bessie clayton the dancer postponed a sixteen weeks coronation engagement ln london to rush to the bedside of her hus band julian mitchell stage manager for florence ziegfeld she arrived to-day on the kronprinzessin cecille mitchell had been reported as dying at the lambs club in this city when miss clayton learned that he was convalescing she said she would not see him and become reconciled but would go to her home at long branch and then re turn to london she sought a divorce from mitchell a year ago naming louise alexander wife of louis strang an automobile racer when she heard that ber husband was at death's door she was presenting a specta cle the mad pierrot in london with a company of 150 persons ice man is fined 50 knickerbocker employe is charged with short weighing patrick reardon 6438 loomis street a driver for the knickerbocker lee company was fined 50 and costs by municipal judge caverley at the hyde park court yesterday charged with â€¢ selling short-weight ice he was arrested by inspectors barr and walsh of the dty sealer's office who testified he attempted to sell an eighty pound cake of ice as one hundred pounds reardon denied the charge charles mike a peddler living at west thirty-seventh and south halsted streets was fined 50 for selling short rheasure potatoes auto kills hinsdale man edwaru paul forty-five years old em ployed in a livery stable at hinsdale was struck and killed last evening near the hinsdale station by au automobile belong ing to charles a brown the patent attor ney eye witnesses say that paul started to cross the street and suddenly turned back in the path of the automobile he was thrown heavily to the street and sus tained a fractured skull paul came to hinsdale about two weeks ago from bax ter springs kan his home rev w p merrill called new york may 24 â€” thetlev ur wil liam pierson merrill since 1895 pastor of the sixth presbyterian church of Chicago was given a unanimous call to the pas torate of the brick presbyterian church of new york at a meeting of the congrega tion to-night thirty gunmen defy m'weeny flout detectives in saloon peter gentleman is at large were 100 detectives sent out with orders to bring in every labor gun man unable to make an arrest when the gunmen were walking the streets freely 1 1 ? 11 1 1 â€¢â€¢-â€¢â€¢ . â€¢ â€¢ â€¢ could detective sergeant biddinger arrest one slugger wanted for assaulting an examiner reporter in the midst of 30 fellow sluggers and the 100 de tectives find none i i i i 1 ii â€¢ â€¢ â€¢ â€¢ â€¢ . â€¢ â€¢ is peter gentleman brother of william gentleman allowed to roam the streets fully armed and with the avowed intention of killing moss enright on sight 1 l 1 l ?. ll â€¢â€¢â€¢â€¢ â€¢ â€¢ â€¢ â€¢ should peter gentleman be at large when he is supposed to be in the county jail waiting to be taken to pontiac after breaking his parole 1 t , , â€¢ â€¢ â€¢ â€¢ yesterday morning chief of police mcweeny announced that he had ordered the arrest of every labor slugger and gunman on sight one hundred detectives from detective headquarters under in structions from inspector hunt to carry out the chief's orders searched Chicago for sluggers all day and night these sluggers are personally known to every one of these de tectives the names of these sluggers are known to the entire police force from top to bottom every one of these sluggers is still in Chicago walking the streets brazenly or defying the police in his favorite saloon haunt at 6 o'clock last night thirty sluggers were in the notorious sap loon known as the widow's at the northeast corner of root street and emerald avenue only one slugger arrestfed ttp to midnight last night but one arrest had been made that arrest was made by detective sergeant guy biddinger he arrested the notorious deanie connors this arrest was made on a warrant sworn out by a reporter for the examiner who had been assaulted the night before by connori and another man at the home of mrs william gentleman the arrest of connors was effected in this same notorious wid owv saloon in the presence of these thirty sluggers to whom con . nors shouted i am pinched for slugging a reporter the arrest of connors developed a most amazing fact peter gentleman who was supposed to be safely locked up in the county jail is at large in hunt to kill enright not only that but he is armed furthermore he is in his old haunts among the sluggers openly seeking moss enright whom he has announced he will kill on sight evidently peter gentleman is quite certain that moss en right is the man he must get in order to avenge the death of his brother in o'malley's saloon monday afternoon the fact of gentleman's liberty and his subsequent acts devel oped in a rather odd manner when detective sergeant biddinger took his prisoner to the harrison street station the prisoner requested the right to telephone to secure bail he immediately called up carroll's saloon at root street and emerald avenue he asked for moss enright but he was disappointed after he hung up the receiver he said " moss enright is under cover they tell me pete gentleman is down there looking for en right and he's yot a gun one hundred detectives have been unable to find the sluggers but the news that the sluggers are quite active and prepared for an other pistol play such as occurred in o'malley's saloon thus drifted quite naturally into one of the police stations state's attorney wayman yesterday ordered tiie may grand jury to remain another week and consider sensational evidence against the labor sluggers which was gained through the arrest of Chicago jack daly a notorious slugger and ex-prize fighter who is said to have unfolded the whole scheme of organized assassination the new evidence is considered so important and convincing that a corps of private detectives have been assigned to the case and are keeping daly hidden from the reach of attorneys who have so far added to the embarrassment of the police the state's attorney denied hat daly had told anything sj continued on 10th page 4th column next sunday season books for forest park free free in response to requests from thousands of people coupon no 1 will be republished next sunday in connection with coupon no 2 order your paper in advance it makes no differ ence who you are it is your first duty every day to turn to the want ad pages of the examiner every man and woman wants something whether it relates to buying or selling or employing through these pages you can quickly and easily satisfy your every want â€¢ want ad pages phone your ad to the examiner â€” call main 6000 a new want ad and business offlce will be opened by the examiner at no 9 west madison street s w corner of state and madison streets on june lst

4^kwi>t^3 and warmer thursday friday prob nÃŸr < ably fair moder3ie to brisk southerly winds thursday probably becoming jhy \ westerly friday the temperature yesterday s^a average - 68 /_\ *__. highest 77 j ck lowest 58 vol ix no 133 a m â€¢ * Chicago examiner thursday Chicago may 25 1911 18 pages thursday wj'lt if tt if it ct Â«__ miw dhtrtrt - 0n and "**" june lbt r ui s l/ul1 "' 1 you can leave your want ads at the examiner's new business office no 9 west madison street just west of state street remember after june lst n4 9 west madison street phone main 5000 begf-rtered in petcf omf rfmt vamarai ty cirrur o a pÂ»tent ofiim rrmÂ«-,r uine k_j_is j ao Â„â€ž,â€ž ,Â£, h â€ž__, john r walsh pardon refused by president Taft c w morse clemency plea also is denied necessary to make examples of men in high places who commit crime says Taft restitution cannot undue moral wrong nor can previous character condone 64wn the mad rush for wealth in the last few decades m the lines between profit from legitimate busi ness and improper gain from undue use of trust control over other people's property and money have sometimes been dimmed and the interest of society requires that whenever opportunity offers those charged with the en forcement of the law should emphasize the distinction between honest business and dishonest breaches of trust president Taft washington may 24 â€” president Taft to-day refused to pardon john r walsh of Chicago and charles w morse of new york both convicted of violating the hanking laws and serving sen tences in federal penitentiaries walsh is confined in the penitentiary at leavenworth kas on janu ary 19 1910 he began serving a five-year sentence and under the provisions of the new parole law he will be eligible for freedom in the middle of sep tember of this year the decisions were handed down by the president at 7:30 o'clock to night and followed a lengthy conference with attorney general wicker sham in both cases he followed the recommendations of the attorney general president taft's action in the walsh case was based strictly on a close analysis of the facts contained in the records declaring that a man who uses the funds of a bank to promote his private interests in such a manner that he is guilty of a fraudulent breach of trust must be punished under the national banking act the president swept aside the reasons advanced by walsh and the thousands who petitioned for hiÃŸ pardon in denying the application charles w am morse who is serving a fifteen â– years the ga â– where he was on january the i characterizes pre 1 accordingly he gives new â– banker the privilege renewing lt i after january decision in walsh the president's decision walsh i in as h john was mls i the fnnds the Chicago i while its was â– sentenced to the leaven h for fire be b jr his sentence january 18 1910 1 is because his h in h seenred him no i hem his banks throushm the his fortune third h he in nt h to substan-m to the fourth because h he ls an in health likely h to one who borne ah good reputation life . itii â– plicity the facts are a la.-_.ph in tbree banks the Chicago na-h the equitable company h the home savings the ter h two Illinois state corporations nhso-h lutely controlled them m h a substantial in ofh them by hh^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^h ruined by methods h he used them to the forh the iime-b etone enter-h using his banks â– be took tbeir ' n h the character mentioned â– cither purchase bonds h which had to h,v ÃŸ lending from funds the money i on notes secured by such bonds h s be neariy the whole funds h the three banks the security of tbes-h because these tn-*eÂ«t h stents the banks the banks ln order â– to a walshh holdings properties andh paid depositors in theh liquidation the banks sustain a i the application for pardon dr>-h in the shows moral h turpitude insidious anof danirerousm ilnd the hank-h ing laws especially those h laws were to secure on the part h of banking officers the faithful m bnd honest administration their trust h in the use handling the funds of ÃŸ the i ts surplus andh deposits for the the shareholders h a officer who lti l promote iu pri-m vate interest the knowledge â– and consent the shareholders vrhoniÃŸ be ls a involves the whole capital h ef speculation h from to derive sur-h is guilty a breach <> r h is andh must be natioual^h ranking fin excuse such a jto reference business methods h co suggestion enterprises h ho up industriesÃŸ tnd to goodÃŸ billie hitt serves as miss elkins escort seeing her off to coronation with her mother haven't married her he says , i new york may 24 mlss katherine elkins chaperoned by her mother slipped i into town late to-day from washington be fore sailing for the coronation the ladies were traveling in charge of that hand some and popular young society man bil lie hitt who has been almost constantly in attendance upon miss elkins since the death of her father whe the party stepped from the parlor car rosemary miss elkins was laughing and chatting with young hitt who was carrying her blue cape and a dark coat belonging to mrs elkins now please do not bother miss elkins he said i know that you must put your questions so fire away at me i have not married mlss elkins and i cannot discuss the abruzzi affair i am not going to sail witb miss elkins and her mother i came tbis far with them and shall return to washington in a day or so mr hitt inquired if the trunks had all , arrived the agent pointed to five heavily loaded trucks and remarked we won't get half of them for this trip sir there ts an awful lot that you have there was one grip bearing the initials w f h mlss elkins and hitt had a confidential â– chat aboard the ferryboat whispering as 1 the trip was made up the river thaw lawyer convicted daniel j o'reilly found guilty of receiving stolen property new york may 24 it took a little more than an hour this afternoon for a jury to return a verdict of guilty against daniel j o'reilly one of the lawyers in the thaw case who was on trial before justice davis in the supreme court on a charge of receiving stolen property in connection with the return of the 85,000 worth of stocks stolen from aaron ban croft the broker following the convic tion the lawyer was remanded for sen tence to-morrow carnegie off for peek at coronation of king steel master makes gift and talks of trust case and oil de cision before sailing new york may 24 as well as he j ever was physically and financially an 1 drew carnepie sailed to-day on the oceanic i to have a peek at the coronation of king george v mrs carnegie and mlss car negie who accompanied the distinguished steel master were not nearly as active as the multi-millionaire who added another 100,000 to his gift of 750,000 to the bu reau of south american republics just he fore he sailed if i am wanted to testify in any in vestigation the government may make into the affairs of the united states steel cor poration he said i am ready and willing to do so so far i have heard nothing about it the question of arbitration between the united states and great britain is in the hands of the lord but mr Taft and mr knox are his active agents and 1 believe they will arrange matters for the good of all referring to the standard oil case mr carnegie said that it was a splendid de cision and business corporations all over the country will profit by it they wiu have a more assured position than ever he added for the highest court in the land decided in favor of the spirit rather than the letter of the law before sailing mr carnegie announced that he would not extend any aid to the depositors of the carnegie trust company he said he did not see how he could he regarded as being responsible for deposits made with the trust company mrs love gets decree wins divorce in new york while husband sued in west mrs sidney c love wife of the once wealthy Chicago broker was granted a divorce yesterday at wbite plains n y the struggle as to which should receive the decree was a bitter one love having filed a suit in the state of washington where he is now interested in some rich mines the decree to mrs love was granted after proceedings that were characterized by every effort at secrecy justice martin j keough of the supreme court of new york heard the testimony in his chambers after the evidence all was in he ordered it suppressed the actual granting of the decree of divorce has put an end to the numerous stories of a reconciliation mrs love formerly was miss marjorie burnes daughter of a st joseph mo mining man who had accumulated a tremendous for tune river victim may be dixon body found bound with wire be lieved to be identified the supposed victim of murder whose body bound witb wire wos found in the Chicago river may 15 may be identified by means of a letter from g w dixon of hernando miss describing the appearance of his son al j dixon who mysteriously disappeared from the hotel waldorf early in april the elder dixon's description tallies exactly with that of the man whose body is still lying unclaimed in the county morgue dixon left the woldorf the first monday in april he has not been seen since his effects a suitcase and a french horn were sent to the father yesterday by manager n b grasser a key found on the dead man's body it is believed will fit the suitcase chicaco woman weds jap mrs emelie luome married to nip ponese in vancouver vancouver b c may 24 after be ing refused a license in portland john inagaki twenty-eight years old a wealthy japanese merchant of san francisco and mrs emelie luome thirty-one years old of Chicago were married in this city to day by judge g l davey mrs luome who said she lived at 8525 stewart avenue Chicago stated she had been a widow nine years mrs luome said she met her pres ent husband 4n san francisco in a mission school they will live in seattle inagaki having sold out his business noted balloonist is shot von phul probably mortally hurt in quarrel over chorus girl denver col may 24 charles s von phul the st louis balloonist who is here preparatory to making a long flight waa shot three times to-night in a quarrel over a chorus girl in the barroom of the browu hotel by h f honwood of new zone g b copelln a mining man and j w atkinson of denver were wounded by stray bullets von phul probably will die gov wilson to be docked trip west may cost new jersey executive mopth's pay trenton n j may 24 this month's pay check is likely to be lost to governor wuson by reason of his trip to the fai west it is understood that the attorney general has advised that the money b paid to acting governor ackerman prece dent being taken from the docking of former gtovernor voorhees for a european trip there is much adverse comment in asmuch as governor wilson is a compara tively poor man while ackerman is a mnl umillionaira .. u _ . Illinois is broke tax bill forgotten hurburgh neglects to report 19,500,000 measure to legislature deneen laughs at muss gets opportunity to use some thing besides waterways in special session call springfield 111 may 24 when the legislature went home saturday it forgot to pass the tax levy bill the little item of 19,500,000 still reposes in the appro priations committee box but it is dead everything died when the assembly passed the joint resolution to adjourn sine die may 31 and on that day consider only messages from the governor as the matter stands now the state is broke â€” broke for two years to come ex cept for the trifling 8,500,000 that is ex pected from the various fee offices which after july 1 must turn their collections into the state treasury it would be the greatest joke auy legis lative body ever played on itself were it not so tragic for charles e hurburgh of galesburg chairman of the seuate ap propriations committee is one of the stake horses iu the deneen stables being primed for the gubernatorial derby and ou the face of the returns it was poor hard-work ing conscientious honest obliging char ley who forgot to report ont the most im portant bill of the entire 1,200 introduced bill definitely dead no one seems to know just how the thing can be untangled so the state treasury may get enough money to honor the 28 000,000 of appropriations that were passed in the last few minutes of the session along about 7 o'clock saturday morning motions were made in both bouses to recon sider the joint resolution killing all bills ln committee and oa the calendars and adjourning until may 31 a proceeding made necessary by the attorney general's ruling that the governor be given ten days to sign all bills after they come into his hands from the engrossers and the two speakers these motisbs were only made to be voted down and they were duly voted down by this handy means acts of the two houses are hermetically sealed and double rivlted they can't be pried open again so by the records now house bill 673 is dead as a finnan haddie even if the members are called back may 31 instead of permitting oglesby and adkins to ad journ sine die they cannot consider any new bills include tax levy in call one sure way out of the pickle is for gov ernor deneen to include the tax levy in his call for a special session oglesby how ever has decided to notify the senate to return in a body may 31 he believes that by unanimous consent the senate may rescind the combined slaughter and adjournment resolution on behalf of the house adkins and one mem ber could do the same then the bill could be revived and sent to third reading and on june 1 it could be passed but right here another interesting prob lem injects itself by rescinding the slaughter resolution the assembly will take the lid from the whole legislative pot so that new bills may be introduced old bills called up and the marathon riot of may 19 resumed where it left off by the time the senate wise men get together they may decide to let the governor fix things up in bis special session cail which would be a beautiful chance for the gov ernor to hang his special sefsion on an other excuse than waterway deneen laughs at muss when mr deneen heard of the muss he just laughed he wouldn't say a word elmer hill a clerk in the secretary of state's office found the bull he wns checking up on revenue and appropria tion bills and couldn't the tax levy meas ure he sought secretary james paddock of the senate padock looked ln the box allotted to hurburgh's committee there was the bill it ha eome over from the house may 16 and had been referred to the senate committee may 17 chairman shanahan of the house appropriations who sent the bill through the house was bard at work in his room when paddock rushed ln and broke tho news to him shanahan has only a few hairs left on his pate but he did his best to remove tbem with bis fists the bill provided for a levy of 7,750,000 for each of the years 1911 and 1912 for general revenue and 2,000,000 a year for the school fund hangs red light on self man then drops peacefully to sleep in street detroit mich may 24 alexander abrahams takes no chances when he gets a jag he proved it before dawn this morn ing he became sleepy on his way home and decided to lie down but before doing bo he went to a pile of gravel where he stole a red lantern and deposited it by his side to warn autos away then he went to sleep in the street a policeman found him }' __ _ â€¢ c â– -'" \ ~ ' j abandons coronation to see dying husband bessie clayton finds him convales cent and refuses to go to man she is suing new yirk may 24 though her suit for divorce is pending in the courts here bessie clayton the dancer postponed a sixteen weeks coronation engagement ln london to rush to the bedside of her hus band julian mitchell stage manager for florence ziegfeld she arrived to-day on the kronprinzessin cecille mitchell had been reported as dying at the lambs club in this city when miss clayton learned that he was convalescing she said she would not see him and become reconciled but would go to her home at long branch and then re turn to london she sought a divorce from mitchell a year ago naming louise alexander wife of louis strang an automobile racer when she heard that ber husband was at death's door she was presenting a specta cle the mad pierrot in london with a company of 150 persons ice man is fined 50 knickerbocker employe is charged with short weighing patrick reardon 6438 loomis street a driver for the knickerbocker lee company was fined 50 and costs by municipal judge caverley at the hyde park court yesterday charged with â€¢ selling short-weight ice he was arrested by inspectors barr and walsh of the dty sealer's office who testified he attempted to sell an eighty pound cake of ice as one hundred pounds reardon denied the charge charles mike a peddler living at west thirty-seventh and south halsted streets was fined 50 for selling short rheasure potatoes auto kills hinsdale man edwaru paul forty-five years old em ployed in a livery stable at hinsdale was struck and killed last evening near the hinsdale station by au automobile belong ing to charles a brown the patent attor ney eye witnesses say that paul started to cross the street and suddenly turned back in the path of the automobile he was thrown heavily to the street and sus tained a fractured skull paul came to hinsdale about two weeks ago from bax ter springs kan his home rev w p merrill called new york may 24 â€” thetlev ur wil liam pierson merrill since 1895 pastor of the sixth presbyterian church of Chicago was given a unanimous call to the pas torate of the brick presbyterian church of new york at a meeting of the congrega tion to-night thirty gunmen defy m'weeny flout detectives in saloon peter gentleman is at large were 100 detectives sent out with orders to bring in every labor gun man unable to make an arrest when the gunmen were walking the streets freely 1 1 ? 11 1 1 â€¢â€¢-â€¢â€¢ . â€¢ â€¢ â€¢ could detective sergeant biddinger arrest one slugger wanted for assaulting an examiner reporter in the midst of 30 fellow sluggers and the 100 de tectives find none i i i i 1 ii â€¢ â€¢ â€¢ â€¢ â€¢ . â€¢ â€¢ is peter gentleman brother of william gentleman allowed to roam the streets fully armed and with the avowed intention of killing moss enright on sight 1 l 1 l ?. ll â€¢â€¢â€¢â€¢ â€¢ â€¢ â€¢ â€¢ should peter gentleman be at large when he is supposed to be in the county jail waiting to be taken to pontiac after breaking his parole 1 t , , â€¢ â€¢ â€¢ â€¢ yesterday morning chief of police mcweeny announced that he had ordered the arrest of every labor slugger and gunman on sight one hundred detectives from detective headquarters under in structions from inspector hunt to carry out the chief's orders searched Chicago for sluggers all day and night these sluggers are personally known to every one of these de tectives the names of these sluggers are known to the entire police force from top to bottom every one of these sluggers is still in Chicago walking the streets brazenly or defying the police in his favorite saloon haunt at 6 o'clock last night thirty sluggers were in the notorious sap loon known as the widow's at the northeast corner of root street and emerald avenue only one slugger arrestfed ttp to midnight last night but one arrest had been made that arrest was made by detective sergeant guy biddinger he arrested the notorious deanie connors this arrest was made on a warrant sworn out by a reporter for the examiner who had been assaulted the night before by connori and another man at the home of mrs william gentleman the arrest of connors was effected in this same notorious wid owv saloon in the presence of these thirty sluggers to whom con . nors shouted i am pinched for slugging a reporter the arrest of connors developed a most amazing fact peter gentleman who was supposed to be safely locked up in the county jail is at large in hunt to kill enright not only that but he is armed furthermore he is in his old haunts among the sluggers openly seeking moss enright whom he has announced he will kill on sight evidently peter gentleman is quite certain that moss en right is the man he must get in order to avenge the death of his brother in o'malley's saloon monday afternoon the fact of gentleman's liberty and his subsequent acts devel oped in a rather odd manner when detective sergeant biddinger took his prisoner to the harrison street station the prisoner requested the right to telephone to secure bail he immediately called up carroll's saloon at root street and emerald avenue he asked for moss enright but he was disappointed after he hung up the receiver he said " moss enright is under cover they tell me pete gentleman is down there looking for en right and he's yot a gun one hundred detectives have been unable to find the sluggers but the news that the sluggers are quite active and prepared for an other pistol play such as occurred in o'malley's saloon thus drifted quite naturally into one of the police stations state's attorney wayman yesterday ordered tiie may grand jury to remain another week and consider sensational evidence against the labor sluggers which was gained through the arrest of Chicago jack daly a notorious slugger and ex-prize fighter who is said to have unfolded the whole scheme of organized assassination the new evidence is considered so important and convincing that a corps of private detectives have been assigned to the case and are keeping daly hidden from the reach of attorneys who have so far added to the embarrassment of the police the state's attorney denied hat daly had told anything sj continued on 10th page 4th column next sunday season books for forest park free free in response to requests from thousands of people coupon no 1 will be republished next sunday in connection with coupon no 2 order your paper in advance it makes no differ ence who you are it is your first duty every day to turn to the want ad pages of the examiner every man and woman wants something whether it relates to buying or selling or employing through these pages you can quickly and easily satisfy your every want â€¢ want ad pages phone your ad to the examiner â€” call main 6000 a new want ad and business offlce will be opened by the examiner at no 9 west madison street s w corner of state and madison streets on june lst